Untitled Document
The United States has raised the prospect of a military invasion of
Saudi Arabia.
The House Armed Services Committee considered the possibility of a
Saudi coup and U.S. response during a hearing on Oct. 26.
Saudi Arabia, with 200,000 military and National Guard troops, is the largest
oil producer and exporter, with an output of nine million barrels of oil per day,
according to Middle East Newsline. The Arab kingdom is the third largest supplier
of oil to the United States, with more than 1.55 million barrels per day.
The scenario was outlined by Michael O'Hanlon, a senior fellow of the Brookings
Institution, who cited a Saudi coup as one of several threats to the United States.
"How should the United States respond if a coup, presumably fundamentalist
in nature, overthrows the royal family in Saudi Arabia?" O'Hanlon asked.
"Such a result would raise the specter of major disruption to the oil economy."
The response could include the deployment of three U.S. Army divisions
backed by fighter-jets and airborne early-warning and alert aircraft. In all,
the U.S.-led mission could include up to 300,000 troops.
Congressional sources said the House hearing, which focused on future threats
in the Middle East and other regions, marked increasing U.S. concern of Saudi
instability. They said the open hearing echoed a series of briefings on Saudi
and Gulf Arab instability given by non-government analysts to the State Department,
Defense Department and National Security Council since 2002.
The House committee was told that U.S. concern of a Saudi coup appears greater
than ever. O'Hanlon said such a coup would also destabilize Pakistan, a nuclear
power since 1998.
"This type of scenario has been discussed for at least two decades and
remains of concern today — perhaps even more so — given the surge
of terrorist violence in Saudi Arabia in recent years as well as the continued
growth and hostile ideology of Al Qaida along with the broader Wahabi movement,"
O'Hanlon said. In his testimony, O'Hanlon envisioned a Saudi coup as resulting
in the emergence of what he termed a fundamentalist regime intent on acquiring
nuclear weapons. Another prospect was that the new regime would seek to disrupt
the oil market.
"Indeed, it might be feasible not to do anything at first, and hope that
the new regime gradually realized the benefits of reintegrating Saudi Arabia
at least partially into the global oil economy," O'Hanlon said. "But
in the end the United States and other western countries might consider using
force."
O'Hanlon envisioned a U.S.-led military operation designed to seize Saudi oil
wells, located along the eastern coast. Washington and its allies would place
the proceeds from Saudi oil sales into escrow for a future pro-Western government
in Riyad.
A U.S.-led military force of 300,000 would be required to secure the entire
Saudi Arabia, O'Hanlon said. He said about 10,000 troops could capture eastern
Saudi Arabia, which contains virtually all of the kingdom's oil wells. But more
than 100,000 additional troops would be required to protect the wells and other
vital infrastructure.
"An operation to overthrow the new Saudi regime and gradually stabilize
a country of the size in question would probably require in the vicinity of
300,000 troops, using standard sizing criteria," O'Hanlon said. "So
in fact a coastal strategy, while easier in some ways and perhaps less bloody
in the initial phases, could be fully half as large and might last much longer."